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NASA used Claude to plot a route for its Perseverance rover on Mars

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Since 2021, NASA’s Perseverance rover has achieved a number of historic milestones, including sending back the first audio recordings from Mars. Now, nearly five years after landing on the Red Planet, it just achieved another feat. This past December, Perseverance successfully completed a route through a section of the Jezero crater plotted by Anthropic’s Claude chatbot, marking the first time NASA has used a large language model to pilot the car-sized robot.

Between December 8 and 10, Perseverance drove approximately 400 meters (about 437 yards) through a field of rocks on the Martian surface mapped out by Claude. As you might imagine, using an AI model to plot a course for Perseverance wasn’t as simple as inputting a single prompt.

As NASA explains, routing Perseverance is no easy task, even for a human. “Every rover drive needs to be carefully planned, lest the machine slide, tip, spin its wheels, or get beached,” NASA said. “So ever since the rover landed, its human operators have painstakingly laid out waypoints — they call it a ‘breadcrumb trail’ — for it to follow, using a combination of images taken from space and the rover’s onboard cameras.”

To get Claude to complete the task, NASA had to first provide Claude Code, Anthropic’s programming agent, with the “years” of contextual data from the rover before the model could begin writing a route for Perseverance. Claude then went about the mapping process methodically, stringing together waypoints from ten-meter segments it would later critique and iterate on.

This being NASA we’re talking about, engineers from the agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) made sure to double check the model’s work before sending it to Perseverance. The JPL team ran Claude’s waypoints through a simulation they use every day to confirm the accuracy of commands sent to the rover. In the end, NASA says it only had to make “minor changes” to Claude’s route, with one tweak coming as a result of the fact the team had access to ground-level images Claude hadn’t seen in its planning process.

“The engineers estimate that using Claude in this way will cut the route-planning time in half, and make the journeys more consistent,” NASA said. “Less time spent doing tedious manual planning — and less time spent training — allows the rover’s operators to fit in even more drives, collect even more scientific data, and do even more analysis. It means, in short, that we’ll learn much more about Mars.”

While the productivity gains offered by AI are often overstated, in the case of NASA, any tool that could allow its scientists to be more efficient is sure to be welcome. Over the summer, the agency lost about 4,000 employees – accounting for about 20 percent of its workforce – due to Trump administration cuts. Going into 2026, the president had proposed gutting the agency’s science budget by nearly half before Congress ultimately rejected that plan in early January. Still, even with its funding preserved just below 2025 levels, the agency has a tough road ahead. It’s being asked to return to the Moon with less than half the workforce it had during the height of the Apollo program.

For Anthropic, meanwhile, this is a major feat. You may recall last spring Claude couldn’t even beat Pokémon Red. In less than a year, the company’s models have gone from struggling to navigate a simple 8-bit Game Boy game to successfully plotting a course for a rover on a distant planet. NASA is excited about the possibility of future collaborations, saying “autonomous AI systems could help probes explore ever more distant parts of the solar system.”



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Google Nest Hub ‘apps’ have mostly disappeared over the years

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Back in 2021, Nest Hub picked up an update that made it easy to access select functions via touch with a selection of “apps,” but they’ve vanished over the past year or so.

While the exact timing is unclear, it was first highlighted on Reddit that apps on Nest Hub are simply gone. There are a handful remaining, including Search, YouTube TV, Sling TV, and “Stories,” but everything else has disappeared.

Back in 2021, the list included Broadcast, Calendar, Contacts, Duo, Games, Netflix, Meet, News, Pandora, Podcasts, Reminders, Shopping, Timer, Weather, YouTube Music, YouTube, and Zoom. Some of those were removed because Google discontinued products like Duo and Podcasts, but it’s a head-scratcher that the rest are suddenly gone.

We’ve checked a Nest Hub Max, Nest Hub (1st gen), and Nest Hub (2nd gen), and apps have disappeared on all of them. The folks at Android Authority found the same on their Nest Hubs.

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That said, it does seem like this is just the latest in a line of these “apps” on Nest Hub disappearing. There are a couple of other reports in the last year showing that apps had been removed. The only difference in those latter two cases are that “Assistant” was still in place, but the rest of the list is identical. So what we’re seeing today isn’t really a brand new change, as much as it is the culmination of a couple of years of Nest Hub apps going away.

The last time we knew for a fact they were still available was in early 2024, when we took the picture at the top of the page.

Clearly, though, this wasn’t exactly a “beloved” feature, seeing as it went more or less unnoticed for months.

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VA chaplains in Mass. told no public prayers mentioning nurses, Alex Pretti

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NORTHAMPTON — Chaplains of all faiths at Veterans Affairs facilities Massachusetts were told this week not to mention VA nurses at all, let alone the name Alex Pretti, at worship or gatherings.

Clergy also were told not to offer counseling or support to Veterans Affairs nurses, all according to emails obtained by The Republican.

That would include chaplains at the Edward P. Boland Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in the Leeds section of Northampton.

Veterans Affairs spokespeople Friday said the prohibition is not national policy.

Northampton vigil honors ICU nurse Alex Pretti, killed by federal agents
Participants hold candles at the vigil honoring ICU nurse Alex Pretti on Thursday night outside Edward P. Boland Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in the Leeds section of Northampton. (Steven E. Nanton/ Special to The Republican)Steven E. Nanton

“At this present time, we were advised by leadership to not move forward with any offerings to staff. When they give further guidance, we will update chaplains as we move forward. This is for all chaplain staff. Thank you,” read an email addressed to “all chaplains,” with a subject line of “Staff Support.”

Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care nurse at a VA in Minnesota was shot and killed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents in Minneapolis on Jan. 24.

The email, dated Jan. 29, is from Kerrie Godsoe, a program support assistant for the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs in Massachusetts.

Reached by phone Friday, Godsoe said that directive was only until the VA receives further guidance. But she declined to say if there were new instructions and said she couldn’t talk further.

Northampton vigil honors ICU nurse Alex Pretti, killed by federal agents
Participants show signs and wave to traffic outside the Edward P. Boland Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in the Leeds section of Northampton on Thursday night at a vigil honoring ICU nurse Alex Pretti. (Steven E. Nanton/ Special to The Republican)Steven E. Nanton

U.S Department of Veterans Affairs spokespeople responded Friday in an email.

“Any internal correspondence or comments you have that may appear to support such false claims do not reflect VA policy,” wrote Pete Kasperowicz, press secretary for the VA.

When asked what that policy is, Kasperowicz wrote: “All VA employees, including chaplains, are welcome to memorialize Alex Pretti in their own way as long as they are respectful, and it does not interfere with their work duties.”

On Thursday, a retired VA chaplain spoke at a memorial vigil for Pretti, organized by the state nurses’ union and hosted outside the facility in Leeds.

Another chaplain recounted the VA’s message and its effects in the anonymous email obtained by The Republican; the clergyperson feared losing the ability to minister at all at the VA.

Clergy were ordered to cease and desist in offering Pretti-related support and counsel to VA nurses. The chaplain was told he can only offer Mass.

The anonymous chaplain relayed that a supervisor said Pretti’s death was political.

“An act against the current administration. That individual’s interpretation, I’m sure and not an official edict,” the email said.

The clergyperson said chaplains were served with copies of the Hatch Act, which outlaws partisan activity by government employees.

The chaplain wrote of a desire to tell the VA supervisor that the Vatican, and Pope Leo XIV, have a different directive.

“His boss, and my ultimate boss does, too,” the email reads.

Chaplains are Veterans Affairs employees.

Spokespeople for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield did not return calls and emails.

The Washington Post reported this week that VA employees nationwide are frustrated they have not received any agencywide acknowledgment of Petti’s killing.

“Staff were also initially told not to leave messages of support for Pretti in some of the center’s public spaces,” employees said, according to The Post.

The Post also said this controversy comes at a low point for morale at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, following staff and budget cuts. Those cuts also have been felt locally, with veterans complaining of disappearing doctors.

The chaplains are making their case with the help of Springfield political consultant Anthony L. Cignoli, president of A.L. Cignoli Co.

“Several friends of different faiths who do this special work for the VA’s patients and the nurses and staff contacted me for advice on how they could contact members of the U.S. House of Representatives to let them know they were not to minister or give intentions during services with any mention of Pretti,” Cignoli said. “They were told that this was coming from ‘on high,’ either the top of the VA or from Washington itself. I understood that to mean the administration.”



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Reid Hoffman urges Silicon Valley leaders to stop bending the knee to President Trump

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Billionaire tech mogul Reid Hoffman is urging his fellow tech moguls in Silicon Valley to not just condemn the killings of two American citizens at the hands of Border Patrol agents, but to stop pacifying President Trump.

In posts on X and an opinion column penned for The San Francisco Standard, Hoffman writes: “We in Silicon Valley can’t bend the knee to Trump. We can’t shrink away and hope the crisis fades. Hope without action is not a strategy ––  it’s an invitation for Trump to trample whatever he can see, including our own business and security interests.”

There’s been some pushback among the most powerful in the Valley against these deaths. Besides Hoffman, a longtime critic of Trump, billionaire VC Vinod Khosla most been the most vocal, characterizing the White House and crew as “a conscious-less administration.”

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Apple CEO Tim Cook, and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei have also expressed concern over the Border Patrol incidents, with some doing so in leaked internal memos. But most of them were quick to distance their concerns over this issue from the President himself.

That’s the distinction that Hoffman wants to end. He’s making the case that tech leaders have power “and sitting on that power is not good for business. It’s also not neutrality. It’s a choice.”

Still, many of the largest tech companies depend on the federal government for business, including AI regulation, tariffs that affect the costs of their products, and massive, lucrative contracts to supply the U.S. government with technology. (OpenAI even got in a bit of hot water in November after its CFO said, and later walked back, that the company wanted the feds to backstop their loans, essentially guaranteeing payment so the AI lab could get more favorable rates.)

Hoffman is echoing the sentiment of a growing contingent of tech workers, who have signed a petition asking their CEOs to call the White House and demand that ICE leave U.S. cities, to cancel all company contracts with ICE, and to speak out publicly against ICE’s violence.

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While there certainly are tech leaders who remain vocal supporters of Trump, like Elon Musk and Keith Rabois of Khosla Ventures, many leaders appear to be, at least publicly, walking the fence. Cook, for instance, wrote that he was “heartbroken” and urged “de-escalation” in his internal memo, but also attended an exclusive screening of First Lady Melania Trump’s documentary hours after the ICE shooting of Alex Pretti, one of the Americans killed in the incidents. Hence Hoffman’s call to arms.



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What do prediction markets like Kalshi cost us?

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Somehow, we live in a world where people can bet on practically anything using sites like Polymarket and Kalshi. In this episode, Devindra and Engadget Senior Reporter Karissa Bell dive into the world of prediction markets. How did we get here? And is endless betting having an effect on the real world? Also, we chat about the new American version of TikTok, which stumbled during its first weekend with a litany of errors and reported censorship.

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Topics

  • Who’s going to buy the Samsung Galaxy Z Tri-fold for $2900? – 1:18

  • Tesla is killing off the Model X and S lines to focus on its Optimus robot moonshot – 6:46

  • Amazon plans to cut 16,000 jobs and close its grocery stores in another round of restructuring – 10:45

  • Most of the UK will lose access to Pornhub in a fight over age verification and privacy – 21:16

  • Internal messages from Meta about Instagram being ‘a drug’ for teens could be bombshell evidence at trial – 26:59

  • What are prediction markets and why are they suddenly so popular? – 32:11

  • As TikTok US stumbles, users ask ‘is it server problems or censorship?’ – 46:55

  • Around Engadget – 59:11

  • Pop culture picks – 1:01:23

Credits

Hosts: Devindra Hardawar and Karissa Bell
Producer: Ben Ellman
Music: Dale North and Terrence O’Brien



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Samsung brings unlimited Care+ repairs for Galaxy to Europe

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Samsung has upgraded its Care+ insurance program in Europe, with Galaxy devices now eligible for “unlimited accidental damage” repairs.

In a press release this week, Samsung says that, as of January 19, Galaxy owners in select countries in Europe have been eligible for an improved Care+ program. For smartphone, tablet, smartwatch, and PC owners, Care+ now covers accidental damage with unlimited repairs, as well as removing the 60-day limit for repairs on damage that occurred away from the owner’s home country.

Samsung breaks down the new benefits as follows:

  •  Unlimited accidental damage cover: Customers can now benefit from unlimited accidental damage cover, which offers protection against knocks, drops and spills. Regardless of how many times a customer damages their Galaxy devices, they’re covered for a Samsung-certified repair.  Plus, the excess fee has been streamlined, offering consistent excess no matter the type or extent of damage to their devices.
  • Seamless care at home and abroad: Samsung Care+ now offers comprehensive coverage both at home and abroad, having removed the 60-day trip limit. Customers can access walk-in repair centres for quick repairs where available. All repairs are completed in Samsung-authorised service centres using original parts, and Samsung has expanded the Samsung Care+ repair locations to make the service more accessible than ever before. For added convenience, claims can be made online or by phone 24/7.
    • Walk-in repair: 175 new walk-in repair locations open to Samsung Care+ customers, with more to come in the future. Whether at home or traveling, customers with accepted claims will be directed to the most convenient, local walk-in repair centre for rapid service.
    • Send-in repair: Customers can choose to send their device in for repair, and Samsung Care+ will arrange seamless collection and delivery to get customers back up and running fast.
  • Extended warranty and device longevity: Should an insured customer experience any mechanical and electrical failure after the standard warranty period, Samsung Care+ covers the repair for the duration of the policy term. To ensure sustained device performance, devices with battery capacity falling below 80 percent after the end of the standard manufacturer warranty are also eligible for a free battery replacement. Every replacement undergoes rigorous performance tests by Samsung-certified technicians during the repair process.
  • Greater flexibility: The new monthly payment option for up to 60 months of coverage provides greater flexibility for customers, even granting the freedom to cancel at any time. For those who prefer a fixed-term option, a two-year policy is also available via a single upfront payment.
  • Additional layer of protection: For added peace of mind, customers can also opt to include Theft and Loss coverage.  Once a claim is approved, a replacement device is dispatched within 48 hours, ensuring minimal disruption to customers’ daily life.  Furthermore, Samsung Knox Guard is used to remotely block missing devices, safeguarding personal data and preventing fraudulent use. Samsung Knox Guard must be activated on every insured mobile phone or tablet.

In the footnotes, Samsung notes that Care+ is currently not available in Hungary, Greece, Slovakia, Ireland, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Ukraine, Serbia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo and Albania, and that the 2-year Care+ program is not available in Belgium, Sweden, Norway, Finland or Denmark “due to local insurance regulations.”

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Iconic Mass. snack food set to close plant, lay off workers

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Massachusetts is losing one of its iconic business locations, as the Cape Cod potato chips manufacturing plant in Hyannis is set to close in April.

The Campbell’s Company, which owns the Cape Cod brand, announced the closing on Thursday.

Cape Cod chips were founded in Hyannis in 1980, and the plant has been operational since 1985. Campbell’s bought the company in 2018.

According to Campbell’s, 49 people will lose their jobs when the plant closes.

In a quarterly fiscal report released on Dec. 9, 2025, Campbell’s disclosed that its net sales had decreased by about 3% over the previous year, with adjusted gross profit decreasing from $871 million to $801 million.

Campbell’s said it will shift production of Cape Cod chips to its plants in Beloit, Wis., Charlotte, N.C., and Hanover, Pa.



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How Sequoia-backed Ethos reached the public market while rivals fell short

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Ethos Technologies, a San Francisco-based provider of software for selling life insurance, debuted on the Nasdaq on Thursday. As one of the year’s first major tech IPOs, the insurtech platform is being closely watched as a bellwether for the 2026 listing cycle.

The company and its selling shareholders raised approximately $200 million in the offering, selling 10.5 million shares at $19 each under the ticker symbol “LIFE” — one of the more on-the-nose choices in recent memory. The name fits. Ethos runs a three-sided platform where consumers buy policies online in 10 minutes without medical exams. It says over 10,000 independent agents use its software to sell those policies and that carriers like Legal & General America and John Hancock rely on it for underwriting and administrative services. Ethos itself isn’t an insurer — it’s a licensed agency earning commissions on sales.

Though the company’s stock closed its first day as a public company at $16.85, 11% below its IPO price of $19, Ethos co-founders Peter Colis and Lingke Wang still have plenty to celebrate, having grown the 10-year-old business to public-market scale.

“When we launched [the business], there were like eight or nine other life insurtech startups that looked very similar to Ethos, with similar Series A funding,” Colis told TechCrunch. “Over time, the vast majority of those startups have pivoted, been acquired at subscale, remain at subscale or gone out of business.”

For instance, Policygenius, which raised over $250 million from investors, including KKR and Norwest Venture Partners, was acquired by PE-backed Zinnia in 2023. Meanwhile, Health IQ, a startup that secured more than $200 million from prominent VCs like Andreessen Horowitz, filed for bankruptcy that same year.

Ethos, which has raised over $400 million in venture capital, could have easily succumbed to a similar fate. Instead, the company remained laser-focused on reaching profitability as the era of cheap capital and easy fundraising came to an end in 2022. “Not knowing what the ongoing funding climate would be, we got really serious about ensuring profitability,” Colis said.

That financial discipline transformed it into a profitable company by mid-2023, according to its IPO documents. Since then, Ethos has also maintained a year-over-year revenue growth rate of more than 50%. In the nine months ending September 30, 2025, the company generated almost $278 million in revenue and just under $46.6 million in net income.

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Still, the company ended its first day as a public company with a market capitalization of about $1.1 billion, a valuation that’s significantly below the $2.7 billion it garnered in its last private round led by SoftBank Vision Fund 2 in July 2021.

When asked why Ethos went public, Colis said that a big part of the reason was to bring “additional trust and credibility” to potential partners and clients. He explained that because many major insurance carriers are over a century old, being publicly traded signals the company’s staying power.

The largest outside shareholders of Ethos include prominent firms, including Sequoia, Accel, Google’s venture arm GV, and SoftBank, as well as General Catalyst and Heroic Ventures. Sequoia and Accel did not sell shares in the IPO, the company disclosed.



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Apple just reported its best-ever quarter for iPhone sales

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Apple shared its latest quarterly financial results today and the news is once again very, very good for the Cupertino company. The quarter ending December 27, 2025 marked “the best-ever quarter” for iPhones, which generated a record high revenue of nearly $85.27 billion for the business. Apple doesn’t disclose the number of devices sold any more, but even with the prices for many of its latest generation of smartphones surpassing $1,000 a pop, that’s still got to be a heck of a lot of iPhones.

“The demand for iPhone was simply staggering,” CEO Tim Cook said on the conference call to discuss the results. “This is the strongest iPhone lineup we’ve ever had and by far the most popular.”

That wasn’t the only massive number in the earnings report. Services revenue also logged its biggest quarter yet, growing 14 percent over the same period last year to reach just over $30 billion. It was also Apple’s biggest quarter to date for total revenue, which was nearly $143.76 billion for the already fabulously wealthy company.



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Google TV tests ‘Free’ and ‘Shop’ tabs on homescreen [Gallery]

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Google TV is testing out new “Free” and “Shop” tabs for the homescreen, with both tabs showcasing additional content in a slightly new way.

The Google TV homescreen hasn’t changed a whole lot since the platform debuted in 2020, but one recent tweak was the removal of a couple of tabs to simplify the homescreen a bit. Specifically, Google ditched the “Library” and “Watchlist” tabs, putting those under a new profile menu.

But, now, Google has added two more tabs back.

In what seems to be a relatively isolated test for now, Google TV is showing new “Free” and “Shop” tabs in between the existing “Live” and “Apps” tabs. The “Free” tab showcases content that can be viewed for free through streaming apps such as Tubi, and presumably includes content from Freeplay, though we can’t see much in these initial images that were posted to Reddit.

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The “Shop” tab, meanwhile, showcases movies that can be purchased from Google TV directly (Google Play, which also shows up in YouTube). This one is a bit surprising to see, actually, as Google has de-emphasized movie purchases in recent years, even ditching the ability to purchase TV shows not long ago.

As mentioned, these new tabs do not appear to be widely available just yet. We’re not seeing the change on any of our Google TV devices yet (including TCL and Hisense TVs, as well as Google TV Streamer), but Google did start rolling out a similar tab on Android TV last year.

Let us know in the comments below if you’re seeing this change!

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